Ficheiro:NASA-Mars2020Rover-ArmTesting-TimeLapse-20190726.webm

Imagem numa resolução maior(Ficheiro de áudio/vídeo WebM, VP8/Opus, duração 20 s, 1 920 × 1 080 píxeis, 1,88 Mbps no total, tamanho do ficheiro: 4,51 MB)

Descrição do ficheiro

Descrição
English: NASA's Mars 2020 Rover Does Biceps Curls

Clean room of the Spacecraft Assembly Facility at JPL In this image, taken July 19, 2019, in the clean room of the Spacecraft Assembly Facility at JPL, the rover's 7-foot-long (2.1-meter-long) arm maneuvers its 88-pound (40-kilogram) sensor-laden turret as it moves from a deployed to a stowed configuration. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

The robotic arm on NASA's Mars 2020 rover does not have deltoids, triceps or biceps, but it can still curl heavy weights with the best. In this time-lapse video, taken July 19, 2019, in the clean room of the Spacecraft Assembly Facility at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, the rover's 7-foot-long (2.1-meter-long) arm handily maneuvers 88 pounds' (40 kilograms') worth of sensor-laden turret as it moves from a deployed to a stowed configuration.

In this time-lapse video, taken July 19, 2019, in the clean room of the Spacecraft Assembly Facility at JPL, the rover's 7-foot-long (2.1-meter-long) arm maneuvers its 88-pound (40-kilogram) sensor-laden turret as it moves from a deployed to a stowed configuration. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

The rover's arm includes five electrical motors and five joints (known as the shoulder azimuth joint, shoulder elevation joint, elbow joint, wrist joint and turret joint). The rover's turret includes HD cameras, the Scanning Habitable Environments with Raman & Luminescence for Organics & Chemicals (SHERLOC) science instrument, the Planetary Instrument for X-ray Lithochemistry (PIXL), and a percussive drill and coring mechanism.

On Mars, the arm and turret will work together, allowing the rover to work as a human geologist would: by reaching out to interesting geologic features, abrading, analyzing and even collecting them for further study via Mars 2020's Sample Caching System, which will collect samples of Martian rock and soil that will be returned to Earth by a future mission.

"This was our first opportunity to watch the arm and turret move in concert with each other, making sure that everything worked as advertised - nothing blocking or otherwise hindering smooth operation of the system," said Dave Levine, integration engineer for Mars 2020. "Standing there, watching the arm and turret go through their motions, you can't help but marvel that the rover will be in space in less than a year from now and performing these exact movements on Mars in less than two."

Mars 2020 will launch from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida in July 2020. It will land at Jezero Crater on Feb. 18, 2021.
Data Tirada em 19 de julho de 2019
Origem https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aT9kxH894lo; see also https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.php?feature=7464
Autor NASA/JPL-Caltech

Licenciamento

Public domain Este ficheiro está no domínio público nos Estados Unidos porque foi criado exclusivamente pela NASA. As orientações sobre o direito de autor da NASA são que «as obras da NASA não têm os direitos de autor protegidos salvo indicação em contrário». Veja Template:PD-USGov, as orientações sobre o direito de autor da NASA ou as normas de uso de imagens do Laboratório de Propulsão a Jato (Jet Propulsion Lab, JPL).
Avisos:

Legendas

Adicione uma explicação de uma linha do que este ficheiro representa
NASA - Mars 2020 Rover - Arm Testing - Time Lapse - July 26, 2019

Elementos retratados neste ficheiro

retrata

video/webm

Histórico do ficheiro

Clique uma data e hora para ver o ficheiro tal como ele se encontrava nessa altura.

Data e horaMiniaturaDimensõesUtilizadorComentário
atual21h59min de 26 de julho de 201920 s, 1 920 × 1 080 (4,51 MB)DrbogdanUser created page with UploadWizard

A seguinte página usa este ficheiro:

Utilização global do ficheiro

As seguintes wikis usam este ficheiro:

Metadados